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15-P-1648 Appeals Court
V.J. vs. N.J.
No. 15-P-1648.
Plymouth. October 11, 2016. - January 30, 2017.
Present: Meade, Milkey, & Kinder, JJ.
Civil Harassment. Harassment Prevention. Constitutional Law,
Freedom of speech and press.
Civil action commenced in the Brockton Division of the
District Court Department on September 25, 2015.
The case was heard by Julie J. Bernard, J.
Michael P. Friedman for the defendant.
MEADE, J. The defendant, N.J. (defendant), appeals from
the extension of a G. L. c. 258E civil harassment prevention
order, which prohibited any contact between him and the
plaintiff, V.J. (plaintiff). The parties are not related. The
order at issue expired on October 7, 2016.1 On appeal, the
1
The expiration of the harassment prevention order does not
render this case moot. See Seney v. Morhy, 467 Mass. 58, 62
(2014); Gassman v. Reason, 90 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 6-7 (2016).
2
defendant claims that the judge did not find, and could not
properly have found, that there were at least three separate
incidents by which he intentionally placed the plaintiff in
fear, intimidated her, or otherwise abused her. We affirm.
1. Background. On September 25, 2015, pursuant to G. L.
c. 258E, §§ 3 and 5, the plaintiff obtained an ex parte
harassment prevention order against the defendant. The order
was set to expire on October 9, 2015, and a hearing was set down
for that date regarding an extension of the order. After an
evidentiary hearing at which both parties testified, a judge of
the Brockton Division of the District Court Department extended
the harassment prevention order to October 7, 2016, and found
the following facts, which are supplemented by the plaintiff's
affidavit in support of the harassment prevention order and her
testimony, which the judge explicitly found to be credible.
Beginning in 2011, the defendant, a passenger on a
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) bus operated
by the plaintiff, made numerous attempts to "court" her; all
were rebuffed. These attempts made her feel uncomfortable and
she feared the defendant. The plaintiff identified a pattern of
harassment between 2012 and 2015, including an incident
occurring on June 10, 2012, while she was on a break at an MBTA
station, in which the defendant approached her from behind and
grabbed her across her chest in a "bear hug," in the manner of
3
one intending to "abduct somebody." The plaintiff "had to pry
his arms from around [her]." This made her "very fearful" of
the defendant.2 Although she did not file a police report, the
plaintiff did report the incident to her supervisor at the MBTA,
as she was in full uniform on MBTA property when the incident
took place.3
On July 1, 2012, the defendant boarded the bus the
plaintiff was driving. Soon after the bus departed, the
defendant attempted to apologize for having grabbed her on June
10, 2012. She did not accept his apology and told the defendant
that if he had to ride on her bus route, he should just pay his
fare and not communicate with her. Upon hearing this, the
2
The plaintiff was also fearful of the defendant because of
his criminal record with the MBTA police, but the appellate
record reflects no specifics about his criminal record. We note
that G. L. c. 258E, § 9, inserted by St. 2010, § 23, provides,
in pertinent part, "When considering a complaint filed under
this chapter, the court shall order a review of the records
contained within the court activity record information system
and the statewide domestic violence recordkeeping system, as
provided in chapter 188 of the acts of 1992 and maintained by
the commissioner of probation, and shall review the resulting
data to determine whether the named defendant has a civil or
criminal record involving violent crimes or abuse." It is
therefore a fair inference that the judge had an opportunity to
review the defendant's criminal record at the time of the
hearing. However, the judge made no reference to the
defendant's record in her findings, and we do not rely on his
record to support the order.
3
During the eight and one-half years the plaintiff had
worked for the MBTA, she had never had to seek a harassment
prevention order or call the police because of any other
passenger's behavior.
4
defendant "went off" and "verbally assault[ed]" the plaintiff in
a rant, saying "out-of-control things." The defendant called
her a "fat bitch" and a "ghetto bitch," and he threatened her
job. Although she did not fear for her job, she was afraid for
her physical safety because he "was irate." The plaintiff had
to call the police to have the defendant removed. As a result
of her fear of the defendant from his physical assault, the
plaintiff began denying him access to the MBTA bus she operated.
On September 9, 2015, after a hiatus of some three years
during which the defendant did not ride the plaintiff's bus
(either because she was assigned to a different route, or he
simply did not attempt to board), the defendant again boarded
the plaintiff's bus and became angry at her for attempting to
deny him access to the bus. Although he made no direct threat
of physical violence, the defendant told the plaintiff to call
the police in order to remove him from the bus, which she did.
The police removed him from the bus, but not before he went on a
rant about the impropriety of his being denied access to her bus
route and telling her that he would be there every day to
inconvenience her as she had done to him. The dissent describes
this incident as "political speech," i.e., a protest against the
authority of the MBTA. See post at . We disagree. When the
defendant told the plaintiff that the police would have to
remove him, his speech became a physical threat, implying as it
5
did that physical force would be required for him to leave the
bus. At that point, it is fair to conclude that his intent was
to frighten and intimidate her, and she was, in fact,
frightened.
The defendant testified that he is a disabled veteran who
suffers from posttraumatic stress disorder, and relies on the
plaintiff's bus route to get to and from the Veteran's
Administration hospital (V.A.), where he both works and receives
services. As a result of being denied access to her bus, the
defendant had difficulty getting to the V.A. He denied any
romantic interest in the plaintiff, and denied making any
threats or physically assaulting her.4
The judge expressly found the defendant's testimony not
credible. She found that he was angry and upset that he could
not ride his chosen bus route. The judge determined his actions
toward the plaintiff were wilful, and caused her to be in fear
and to suffer intimidation. The judge further observed that the
defendant was "visibly angry and upset during the course of
th[e] harassment order hearing."
At the conclusion of the hearing, the judge extended the
harassment prevention order to October 7, 2016, ordering the
4
The defendant also filed a claim with the Massachusetts
Commission Against Discrimination against the MBTA and the
plaintiff, which claimed discrimination based on race and
disability. That action ended with a finding of lack of
probable cause.
6
defendant not to abuse or contact the plaintiff, and to stay
away from both her home and work. This included the MBTA bus
operated by the plaintiff. The defendant timely noticed an
appeal.
2. Discussion. "In reviewing a civil harassment order
under G. L. c. 258E, we consider whether the judge could find,
by a preponderance of the evidence, together with all
permissible inferences, that the defendant committed '[three] or
more acts of willful and malicious conduct aimed at a specific
person committed with the intent to cause fear, intimidation,
abuse or damage to property and that [did] in fact cause fear,
intimidation, abuse or damage to property.' G. L. c. 258E, § 1,
'Harassment,' inserted by St. 2010, § 23. See O'Brien v.
Borowski, 461 Mass. 415, 419-420 (2012)." A.T. v. C.R., 88
Mass. App. Ct. 532, 535 (2015). It is the plaintiff's burden to
prove that each of the three qualifying acts was maliciously
intended, defined by G. L. c. 258E, § 1, as being "characterized
by cruelty, hostility or revenge," and, as pertinent here, that
each act was intended by the defendant to intimidate the
plaintiff or place the plaintiff in "fear of physical harm or
fear of physical damage to property." O'Brien v. Borowski,
supra at 426, 427.
"In the context of a civil [harassment prevention] order,
the test is a subjective one; if all of the other elements are
7
present, it is sufficient to show that the harassment actually
caused fear, intimidation, or abuse to the plaintiff, even if a
reasonable person in the plaintiff's situation would not have
been so affected." Petriello v. Indresano, 87 Mass. App. Ct.
438, 444-445 (2015). In the determination of whether the three
acts "did 'in fact cause fear, intimidation, abuse or damage to
property,'" it is "the entire course of harassment, rather than
each individual act, that must cause fear or intimidation."
O'Brien v. Borowski, supra at 426 n.8. A.T. v. C.R., supra.
Here, although the judge did not delineate three acts of
harassment, she did find that the plaintiff continued to suffer
harassment from the defendant "well in excess of three (3) times
over the past several years." This finding is amply supported
by the record. The first act occurred on June 10, 2012, when
the defendant grabbed her from behind in a bear hug across her
chest, as if he intended to "abduct" her. She had to pry his
arms off to get free.
The second act occurred on July 1, 2012, when the defendant
boarded the plaintiff's bus and attempted to apologize for
having grabbed her on June 10, 2012. When the plaintiff refused
his apology and requested that he not speak to her, the
defendant called her a "fat bitch" and a "ghetto bitch," and he
threatened her job. Although she was not concerned for her job,
she was afraid for her physical safety because he "was irate."
8
In fact, the plaintiff had to call the police to have the
defendant removed.
The third act occurred on September 9, 2015, when the
defendant again boarded the plaintiff's bus, and became angry at
her for attempting to deny him access to the bus. Although he
did not directly threaten the plaintiff with physical violence,
he did tell her that she would need the police to have him
removed from the bus. When the police did remove the defendant
from the bus, he began ranting about being denied access to her
bus route and told the plaintiff that he would be there every
day to inconvenience her as she had done to him.
The defendant claims that the judge's failure to delineate
three distinct acts was error and that, in any event, the three
incidents we describe above are not sufficient for purposes of
G. L. c. 258E. We disagree. In the first incident, the
defendant physically assaulted the plaintiff in a manner that
she described as an attempted abduction. She had to pry his
arms off of her to get free. Thus, his hostile behavior not
only placed the plaintiff in fear of physical harm, but also
actually caused her physical harm. See O'Brien v. Borowski,
supra at 427.
The second act is similarly supportive of the judge's
ultimate finding. Although the defendant claimed he was
attempting to apologize for having assaulted her a few weeks
9
prior, his claimed atonement devolved into threats and venomous
name calling. See A.T. v. C.R., 88 Mass. App. Ct. at 535 (the
defendant's calling the plaintiff a "bitch" was "indicative of a
cumulative pattern of harassment"). Based on the defendant's
"irate" behavior, and the necessity of police intervention to
remove the defendant, the plaintiff expressed explicit fear for
her physical safety.
The third act presents the most questions. On this
occasion, the defendant boarded the bus and angrily confronted
the plaintiff for attempting to deny him access to the bus.
Although he did not directly threaten the plaintiff with
physical violence, he nonetheless threatened that he would
continue confronting her in this same manner, i.e., ranting
about being denied access, and that she would need continuous
police intervention to remove him from the bus. It was his
stated goal that on a daily basis he would inconvenience her as
she had him. This suffices to demonstrate the defendant's
malicious intent, characterized by cruelty, hostility, or
revenge, to intimidate the plaintiff and to place her in fear of
physical harm. See O'Brien v. Borowski, supra at 426-427. See
also A.T. v. C.R., supra at 536 ("The threat to make the
plaintiff's life a living hell clearly was intimidation").
Indeed, as in A.T. v. C.R., the defendant's stated goal of a
daily confrontation on the bus that would require the police to
10
remove him fell within the definition of "true threat" described
in O'Brien v. Borowski, supra at 424.5 See Petriello v.
Indresano, 87 Mass. App. Ct. at 446. In fact, in O'Brien v.
Borowski, supra at 425, the Supreme Judicial court explained
that the "'true threat' doctrine applies not only to direct
threats of imminent physical harm, but to words or actions that
-- taking into account the context in which they arise -- cause
the victim to fear such harm now or in the future and evince
intent on the part of the speaker or actor to cause such fear."
Furthermore, not only did the defendant expressly state his
intent to exact revenge for what had been done to him, but it is
also important that this incident not be viewed in isolation.
Rather, we must look to the defendant's entire course of conduct
to determine whether the evidence supports the judge's finding
that the defendant caused the plaintiff fear or intimidation.
5
As described in O'Brien, "A true threat does not require
'an explicit statement of an intention to harm the victim as
long as circumstances support the victim's fearful or
apprehensive response.'" O'Brien v. Borowski, supra at 424,
quoting from Commonwealth v. Chou, 433 Mass. 229, 234 (2001).
See United States v. Fulmer, 108 F.3d 1486, 1492 (1st Cir. 1997)
("The use of ambiguous language does not preclude a statement
from being a threat"). See also United States v. Malik, 16 F.3d
45, 49 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 513 U.S. 968 (1994) ("An absence
of explicitly threatening language does not preclude the finding
of a threat"). "Nor need a true threat threaten imminent harm;
sexually explicit or aggressive language 'directed at and
received by an identified victim may be threatening,
notwithstanding the lack of evidence that the threat will be
immediately followed by actual violence or the use of physical
force.'" O'Brien v. Borowski, supra at 424, quoting from
Commonwealth v. Chou, supra at 235.
11
Viewing the third act in conjunction with the evidence of the
second act, where the defendant, during an angry and hostile
confrontation on the bus, called the plaintiff a "fat bitch" and
a "ghetto bitch," which required police intervention to remove
the defendant and caused the plaintiff to express explicit fear
for her physical safety, the judge was warranted in her implicit
conclusion that the third act also caused the plaintiff to
subjectively fear for her physical safety. See Seney v. Morhy,
467 Mass. 58, 63 (2014), quoting from O'Brien v. Borowski, supra
at 426 n.8 ("The target of the harassment must have experienced
an 'entire course of harassment,' the whole of which caused fear
or intimidation"). Given the overlapping nature of the
defendant's conduct in the second and third act, as well as the
entire course of conduct, and not viewing each act in isolation
as the dissent does, it was reasonable for the judge to infer
the existence of the plaintiff's fear of physical violence as
well as the defendant's malicious intent. Contrast Gassman v.
Reason, 90 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 9 (2016) ("[T]here simply is no
evidence that [the defendant] intended to cause any harm at all
to [the plaintiff], much less that she wilfully committed three
or more acts, aimed at [the plaintiff], each with the intent to
cause fear, intimidation, abuse, or damage to property . . . [,
and] . . . no evidence of a true threat").
12
In the end, the judge had an opportunity at the hearing to
observe both the plaintiff and the defendant, including their
demeanor. The judge particularly noted that she found the
plaintiff's testimony to be credible, but not the defendant's.
More importantly, she found not only that the defendant was
"angry" that he could not ride the bus of his choosing, but also
that his anger spilled over into the court room itself where,
the judge noted, he "was visibly angry and upset during the
course of [the] harassment order hearing." Finally, it is
important to note that this order of protection is civil in
nature, not penal. This case is not about punishing the
defendant for his behavior and actions,6 but rather, it is about
providing a limited measure of protection for the plaintiff, who
the judge found to be genuinely in fear for her physical safety.
See A.T. v. C.R., 88 Mass. App. Ct. at 540 ("This is a civil
case, interpreting a statute, G. L. c. 258E, whose purpose is
protective, not penal"). Given all that has occurred, the judge
properly determined that the plaintiff carried her burden to
demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that she was
entitled to an order of protection under G. L. c. 258E.
October 9, 2015, extension
order affirmed.
6
Contrary to the dissent's concern regarding acts of civil
disobedience, post at note 10, the defendant made no such claim
at the hearing, and if he had, it likely would have been
discredited as the judge did with the entirety of his testimony.
MILKEY, J. (dissenting). The defendant, N.J. (defendant),
a Gulf War veteran who suffers from posttraumatic stress
disorder, lives in Randolph. He depends on public
transportation to take him to the Veterans Affairs hospital in
the Jamaica Plain section of Boston, where he both receives
services and is employed. The plaintiff, V.J. (plaintiff), is
the driver of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority
(MBTA) bus that fits the defendant's work schedule. The
plaintiff decided to ban the defendant from using her bus.
Then, based in material part on the ire the defendant expressed
for not being allowed to use the bus on which he depends for
employment and treatment, the plaintiff obtained a harassment
prevention order that served to implement her ban. Because I
believe that the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to
support such an order, I respectfully dissent.
Background.1 According to the plaintiff, the defendant, a
regular bus rider on her route, tried to "court" her for several
months. For example, he tried to give her his phone number.
The plaintiff rebuffed such advances, and -- in response to a
question by the judge as to whether she reported the defendant's
behavior to her supervisors -- she testified, "I didn't pay any
attention to it, 'cause he's not the only gentleman that's ever
1
The factual recitations that follow are drawn from the
judge's findings, supplemented by the plaintiff's testimony,
which the judge expressly credited.
2
boarded my bus . . . who's, you know . . . tried to . . . take
me out or whatever."2 The plaintiff's attitude toward the
defendant understandably changed when, on June 10, 2012, while
she was making a purchase at a store at an MBTA station during a
break, the defendant gave her an unsolicited "bear hug" from
behind.
On July 1, 2012, the defendant came to the front of the
plaintiff's bus to apologize for the earlier incident. The
plaintiff refused to accept this apology and told the defendant
to stop speaking to her. At that point, the defendant "began to
verbally assault" the plaintiff, referring to her, for example,
as a "ghetto bitch." According to the plaintiff's testimony,
the defendant threatened her job, but he did not threaten
physical harm or "make any threatening gestures." She
nevertheless was afraid for her physical safety because he was
"irate." She also testified that based on the defendant's
"go[ing] on these rants and say[ing] these out-of-control things
that are just untrue," she did not consider him to be "of sound
mind." The July 1, 2012, incident ended with the plaintiff
having the police remove the defendant from the bus.
2
The judge found that the defendant's advances caused the
plaintiff to "feel uncomfortable," a statement that the majority
repeats. See ante at . Although one can imagine that this
could have been the case, there was not actually any testimony
to that effect. To the contrary, the plaintiff's own comments
indicate that she was little bothered by the defendant's trying
to "court" her.
3
According to the testimony adduced at the evidentiary
hearing, the next three years passed without incident. The
plaintiff occasionally would spot the defendant at the bus stop,
but she testified that "[h]e didn't even attempt to get on once
he saw who was behind the wheel." During these passing
encounters, the defendant did not make any sort of threat to the
plaintiff. Although the record is less than clear about the
details, it reflects that both parties understood that the
plaintiff effectively had banned the defendant from riding her
bus,3 and that, representing himself, the defendant brought two
unsuccessful cases against the MBTA seeking to challenge that
practice (one in the Massachusetts Commission Against
Discrimination and one in Superior Court). The record also
reflects that the plaintiff was for a time assigned to a
different bus route, obviating the need for any interactions
between the two. However, she eventually was returned to the
original route.
On September 9, 2015 -- that is, after a thirty-eight month
hiatus -- the defendant decided to board the bus even though the
plaintiff was driving it. As the plaintiff herself
acknowledged, he did not make any threats to her at this time.
When she challenged his boarding the bus, he told her to call
3
The plaintiff herself referred to "three years of me
denying him access to my bus."
4
the police. She did so, and the police removed him -- in the
plaintiff's words -- "because I wanted him removed." The
plaintiff's testimony also referenced an undated subsequent
incident in which the defendant stood outside the bus doors and
"kept going on and on and on" until the police arrived.
On September 25, 2015, the plaintiff filed a complaint for
protection from harassment pursuant to G. L. c. 258E, § 3, along
with an affidavit summarizing three alleged incidents of
harassment. These were the June 10, 2012, "bear hug" incident;
the July 1, 2012, incident in which the defendant tried to
apologize and then became irate; and the September 9, 2015,
incident in which the plaintiff had the police remove him from
the bus.4 When the judge asked her to explain what caused her to
seek the order, the plaintiff testified:
"He's just so aggressive. If he could just, could have
come to me like a normal person would, without the
temperament, I, I, perhaps I might have, but he's just so
aggressive with the 'Call the police' and it's just -- it's
crazy. It's just kind of crazy."
She then stated that she was in fear of physical harm from the
defendant and that such fear was "based on the things I know
4
In her affidavit submitted with that application, but not
in her testimony, the plaintiff stated that before the police
removed the defendant, he went "on a rant about how I can't
continue to do this and that he would be there every day to
inconvenience me like I have him."
5
that are in his criminal record."5 No evidence was admitted as
to the defendant's criminal record, if any.6
Discussion. A harassment protection "order can be sought
by anyone 'suffering from harassment.'" F.A.P. v. J.E.S., 87
Mass. App. Ct. 595, 598 (2015), quoting from G. L. c. 258E, § 3.
"To establish harassment, a complainant must prove that the
defendant, motivated by cruelty, hostility, or revenge, wilfully
committed three or more acts aimed at a specific person, each
with the intent to cause that person to experience fear or
intimidation, or to cause abuse or damage to property, which,
considered together, did in fact cause fear, intimidation,
abuse, or damage to property." O'Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass.
415, 426 (2012).7
5
At an earlier point in the evidentiary hearing, the
plaintiff mentioned the bear hug without offering that she was
frightened by it. The judge then sought to elicit from her that
it was the bear hug that placed her in fear. The plaintiff
responded: "That, and based on his record with the MBTA Transit
Police, yes, I am very fearful."
6
The majority accurately points out that in harassment
actions, judges are directed to review a defendant's criminal
record. See ante at note 3. However, nothing before us
indicates that the judge did so here, or what that record, if
any, showed. Therefore, we cannot rely on the defendant's
criminal record (if any) in determining whether the evidence was
sufficient to support the issuance of the harassment order.
7
Under the statute, there is a "second definition of
'harassment' [that] applies to situations where . . . a
defendant allegedly committed one or more acts of sexual
misconduct." F.A.P. v. J.E.S., 87 Mass. App. Ct. at 599, citing
G. L. c. 258E, § 1 (definition of "Harassment," subsection
6
The harassment statute does not apply to speech protected
by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. Id.
at 421-428. This means that speech cannot qualify as
"harassment" unless it is exempted from protection under the
First Amendment because it rises to the level of "fighting
words" or "true threats." Ibid. "Fighting words" are "limited
to words that are likely to provoke a fight: face-to-face
personal insults that are so personally abusive that they are
plainly likely to provoke a violent reaction and cause a breach
of the peace." Id. at 423, citing Cohen v. California, 403 U.S.
15, 20 (1971). "'True threats' encompass those statements where
the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an
intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular
individual or group of individuals." Virginia v. Black, 538
U.S. 343, 359 (2003).
For purposes of my analysis, I assume arguendo that the
judge reasonably could have found that the June, 2012, bear hug
incident and the July, 2012, failed apology incident each
qualified as an act of harassment under the statute.8 That
[ii]). Had the plaintiff demonstrated that the bear hug
amounted to an indecent assault and battery, she could have
sought a harassment prevention order on that basis alone. The
plaintiff did not press the case on this basis, nor did the
judge consider this alternative theory.
8
In fact, it is not clear that the June and July incidents
qualify as acts of harassment. For example, although the judge
7
leaves the question whether the third incident on which the
plaintiff relies, the September 9, 2015, incident, also so
qualifies.9 Neither the judge's findings nor the testimony
indicates what the defendant actually said during the incident
other than to insist that the plaintiff call the police.
Nothing suggests that the defendant said anything at the time
that comes close to "fighting words" or "true threats."
Contrast Commonwealth v. Bigelow, 475 Mass. 554, 567-570 (2016)
(fact finder reasonably could find that certain unsettling
letters anonymously sent to wife of public official at her home
rose to the level of "true threats").
The majority discerns a threat of violence in the
defendant's insistence that the plaintiff contact the police,
stating that "[w]hen the defendant told the plaintiff that the
police would have to remove him, his speech became a physical
threat, implying as it did that physical force would be required
expressly rejected the defendant's portrayal of the ill-
conceived bear hug as an effort to "comfort" the plaintiff (as
he would do with someone at his church), it does not follow that
the bear hug therefore was motivated by "cruelty, hostility, or
revenge" (as opposed to, say, a misplaced attempt at
familiarity). The judge found only that the defendant's actions
were "willful"; she made no finding as to the defendant's
intent.
9
As noted, there was evidence of a fourth incident in the
weeks prior to the evidentiary hearing in which the defendant
voiced his right to board the bus but was taken away by police
before he boarded it. This conduct fails to qualify as an act
of harassment for the same reasons, discussed below, that the
more intrusive conduct of September 9, 2015, fails to qualify.
8
for him to leave the bus." Ante at . Assuming arguendo that
the defendant's statement to "call the police" can be taken as a
suggestion that the police might have to use force to remove him
from the public bus, this cannot reasonably be taken as an
implied threat of violence against the plaintiff.10 Moreover,
the majority draws this inference even though the plaintiff
herself expressly disclaimed that the defendant made any threat
to her during the September 9, 2015, incident. Specifically,
when the judge asked her directly, "[D]id he make a threat to
you at that time?" the plaintiff replied, "He did not."11
The majority also relies on the plaintiff's statement in
her affidavit that the defendant had said that "he would be
there every day to inconvenience me like I have him." That
statement does not supply the necessary element of threatened
violence either. Indeed, according to the plaintiff's own
words, what the defendant was threatening was inconvenience
comparable to that which she had caused him (further
undercutting any suggestion that he had threatened physical
harm).
10
Drawing such an inference also has disturbing
ramifications for civil society (treating, as it does, a
venerable form of peaceful protest as threatened violence).
11
A moment later the judge asked, "[H]e again didn't make
any -- say anything to you that was a direct threat to your
physical well-being, did he?" Again, the plaintiff said, "No."
9
Furthermore, as a matter of law, a stated intent to cause
mere inconvenience cannot rise to the level of "a serious
expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to
a particular individual." Virginia v. Black, 538 U.S. at 359
(defining the "true threat" category of unprotected speech).
See O'Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. at 427 (plaintiff in a
harassment case must prove that defendant intended to cause
"fear of physical harm or fear of physical damage to property").
By recognizing threatened inconvenience as a true threat, lying
outside the protection of the First Amendment, we are diluting
what is properly a narrow and carefully defined class of
unprotected speech.
In fact, far from lying at the periphery of free speech,
the defendant's words can be understood as decrying perceived
abuses by a public official and hence as a form of "political
speech" situated at the core of the First Amendment's
protection. See Van Liew v. Stansfield, 474 Mass. 31, 38
(2016), citing McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commn., 514 U.S. 334,
346 (1995) (public accusations that local planning board member
"was 'corrupt and a liar'" could not qualify as "incidents of
harassment" where they "constituted political speech and were at
the core of the speech that the First Amendment . . .
protects"). As the Supreme Court has emphasized, "Speech is
often provocative and challenging," and it does not lose its
10
First Amendment protection simply because it may cause "public
inconvenience, annoyance, or unrest." Houston v. Hill, 482 U.S.
451, 461 (1987) (quotation omitted). See id. at 457-458
(aggressive verbal challenges to police officers held to be
protected speech).
Of course, the defendant's conduct during the September 9,
2015, incident also included nonverbal actions. Those actions
consisted of the defendant's boarding the bus against the
plaintiff's wishes and refusing to leave until the police came.
In light of the plaintiff's refusal to operate the bus with him
on it, this had the effect of disrupting the bus trip. Again,
however, any desire on the part of the defendant to cause the
plaintiff or others inconvenience does not qualify as
harassment. See O'Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. at 427.
To be sure, the judge disbelieved the defendant's claim to
be a calm individual, and she found that he "is clearly angry
and upset that he cannot ride the bus he chooses to work."
However, she did not find, nor did the plaintiff even argue,
that the defendant's conduct on September 9, 2015, was motivated
by anything other than his desire to be allowed once again to
ride the public bus.12 In this context, however loud or
12
The judge found that the defendant's conduct was wilful
and that it caused the plaintiff to be fearful, but she made no
findings that the defendant's conduct was "malicious" or that he
intended to place the plaintiff in fear for her physical safety.
11
insistent his protests may have been,13 the defendant's conduct
cannot reasonably be said to have been motivated by "cruelty,
hostility, or revenge." As a matter of law, the September 9,
2015, incident simply does not qualify as an act of harassment,
and the plaintiff therefore has not shown the three acts
necessary for obtaining a harassment prevention order.14
None of this is to say that in her role as an MBTA official
entrusted to keep the public safe, the plaintiff lacked the
authority to exclude the defendant from her bus. Whether she
possessed, and properly exercised, such authority is not before
us, and I express no view on it. The question instead is
whether, under the circumstances of this case, a harassment
prevention order pursuant to G. L. c. 258E provided a proper
vehicle for the plaintiff to accomplish that end. Because, in
my view, it plainly did not, I respectfully dissent.
13
In point of fact, the record includes virtually nothing
about the tone and volume that the defendant used during the
September 9, 2015, incident.
14
The majority correctly points out that, in assessing
whether conduct in fact caused fear or intimidation, we should
not view incidents in isolation. See ante at . Instead, "It
is 'the entire course of harassment, rather than each individual
act, that must cause fear or intimidation.'" A.T. v. C.R., 88
Mass. App. Ct. 532, 541 (2015) (Blake, J., dissenting), quoting
from O'Brien v. Borowski, supra at 426 n.8. But the fact that,
more than three years earlier, the defendant had given the
plaintiff an unwanted bear hug in public and called her terrible
names after his attempt to apologize failed, does nothing to
alter the essential nature of the September 9, 2015, incident as
one in which the defendant merely was insisting that he had a
right to ride the bus.